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2019 Macau Grand Prix

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Race details
Date 17 November 2019
Official name 66th Suncity Group Macau Grand Prix – FIA F3 World Cup
Location Guia Circuit, Macau
Course Temporary street circuit
6.120 km (3.803 mi)
Distance Qualifying Race
10 laps, 61.200 km (38.028 mi)
Main Race
15 laps, 91.800 km (57.042 mi)
Weather Qualifying Race: Dry and clear
Main Race: Dry and clear
Qualifying Race
Pole
Driver Estonia Jüri Vips Hitech Grand Prix
Time 2:04.997
Fastest Lap
Driver Estonia Jüri Vips Hitech Grand Prix
Time 2:06.317 (on lap 8)
Podium
First Estonia Jüri Vips Hitech Grand Prix
Second Russia Robert Shwartzman SJM Prema Theodore Racing
Third Denmark Christian Lundgaard ART Grand Prix
Main Race
Pole
Driver Estonia Jüri Vips Hitech Grand Prix
Fastest Lap
Driver United Kingdom Jake Hughes HWA Racelab
Time 2:06.419
Podium
First Netherlands Richard Verschoor MP Motorsport
Second Estonia Jüri Vips Hitech Grand Prix
Third United States Logan Sargeant Carlin Buzz Racing

The 2019 Macau Grand Prix (officially the 66th Suncity Group Macau Grand Prix – FIA F3 World Cup) was a Formula Three (F3) motor race held on the streets of Macau on 17 November 2019. Unlike previous races, the event was a non-championship round of the FIA Formula 3 Championship, and drivers from all F3 championships were welcome. The race itself was made up of two races: a ten-lap qualifying race to set the starting grid for the fifteen-lap main event. It was the 66th Macau Grand Prix, the 37th for F3 cars, and the fourth FIA F3 World Cup.

MP Motorsport driver Richard Verschoor won the event from fourth place. Hitech Grand Prix's Jüri Vips won the qualification race the day before and led the first seven laps of the main race before being passed by Verschoor on the eighth lap. Verschoor held off Vips' several overtake attempts to become the first rookie to win the Macau Grand Prix since Keisuke Kunimoto in 2008. He was the first Dutch driver to win the event and the second overall, after Roberto Moreno, to win the New Zealand Grand Prix and Macau. Vips finished second and Carlin Buzz Racing's Logan Sargeant was third.

Background and entry list

[edit]

The Macau Grand Prix is a Formula Three (F3) race considered to be a stepping stone to higher motor racing categories such as Formula One and has been termed the territory's most prestigious international sporting event.[1][2] The event was made a non-championship round of the FIA Formula 3 Championship for the first time in 2019; its head Bruno Michel ensured the season concluded at the Sochi Autodrom and not the Yas Marina Circuit as it had been in the preceding GP3 Series to prevent logistical complications for drivers and teams.[3] It was the 66th Macau Grand Prix, the 37th under F3 rules, and the 4th FIA F3 World Cup.[4] The race was held on the temporary 6.120 km (3.803 mi) 22-turn Guia Circuit in Macau's streets on 17 November 2019 after three days of practice and qualifying.[4][5]

Drivers with an FIA Grade B licence or higher who raced in the FIA F3 Championship or its regional championships were invited to compete in Macau by motorsport's world governing body, the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), with higher-placed drivers in these respective series receiving priority in earning an invitation to the meeting.[6] The race's 30-car grid featured 2019 FIA Formula 3 champion Robert Shwartzman, two-time Macau Grand Prix winner Dan Ticktum,[7] Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters driver Ferdinand Habsburg,[8] FIA Formula Two competitor Callum Ilott,[7] European Le Mans Series participant Arjun Maini,[9] Japanese Formula 3 Championship racer Enaam Ahmed,[10] and Enzo Fittipaldi and Sophia Flörsch from the Formula Regional European Championship.[7][11] The Prema team hired Frederik Vesti, the Formula Regional European champion, to drive the injured Jehan Daruvala's car.[12] Alex Peroni had to withdraw from the race due to a broken vertebrae he sustained in an accident at the Autodromo Nazionale di Monza.[13]

Sophia Flörsch returned to the race after she was involved in a major accident in the 2018 edition.

The replacement of the series' outdated Dallara F317 car with the more powerful Dallara F3 2019 prompted organisers to upgrade the Guia Circuit from an FIA Grade 3 to a Grade 2 homologation. Former FIA race director Charlie Whiting and circuit organisers indicated a desire for such a shift in May 2019.[14][15] They moved the inside wall at Lisboa turn to guide cars away from its apex kerb and towards a widened run-off area, in response to a major accident involving Flörsch, Daruvala and Sho Tsuboi in the 2018 race. The corner's fencing was supported by a second row of fences on the Hotel Lisboa grounds, a tyre wall was installed, and a photographer's area that had halted Flörsch's car was dismantled. The Reservoir and Mandarin Bend corners were realigned and retrofitted with SAFER barriers. TecPro energy-absorbing walls were erected at the San Francisco, Hospital, and Fisherman's Bend bends, while foam-protection technologies were implemented throughout the track.[16][17]

Pirelli supplied tyres for the event for the second time after 2016.[18] Cars were installed with drag reduction system (DRS), an adjustable flap at the back of each car that helps with overtaking when activated, at Macau for the first time. It had one activation zone for the race: on the straight between the Mandarin Oriental Bend and Lisboa corners. The FIA Formula 3 Championship rules required entrants to be within a second of each other in order to use DRS.[16] An electronic flag system was implemented and elevated for the first time in ten areas of the circuit to complement the existing flags waved by track marshals. The sections were chosen by the FIA, the Macau Grand Prix Committee, and numerous Macau government ministries, with the goal of expanding its deployment in the future.[14][17] The Government of Macau's Civil Aviation Authority barred all unmanned aircraft from flying during the race weekend to improve safety and prevent hindrances.[19]

Practice and qualifying

[edit]

Two 40-minute practice sessions, one on Thursday morning and the other on Friday morning, preceded the race on Sunday.[20] Marcus Armstrong set new unofficial track lap record of 2 minutes, 8.023 seconds with two minutes remaining in the first session, which took place in clear and warm weather.[21][22][23] He was followed by Jake Hughes, Ticktum, Shwartzman, Richard Verschoor, Ilott, Vesti, Ahmed, Logan Sargeant and Christian Lundgaard in positions two through ten.[21] With sixteen minutes remaining, Yuki Tsunoda braked too late and hit a barrier at Hospital Bend, triggering the virtual safety car procedure that dictates vehicles slow down.[21][23] The Hitech Grand Prix team repaired his car;[24] he could not participate for most of the first qualifying session because of ongoing car work.[25] Jüri Vips had to enter pit lane to have his open rear wing slot fixed after experiencing a DRS failure late in the session.[22][23]

Two 40-minute sessions were held on Thursday afternoon and Friday afternoon, respectively, for qualifying.[20] Each driver's final qualifying place was determined by the quickest time they recorded from either session.[6] The first session was held in clear and warm weather.[26] Armstrong set a benchmark fastest lap before Shwartzman and then Vips led. Hughes revised the overall fastest lap to 2 minutes, 6.793 seconds for provisional pole position.[27][28] David Beckmann was 0.051 seconds slower in second.[29] Vips was third, early pace setter Armstrong fourth, and Sargeant fifth.[25] Ticktum, in his first race driving the new F3 car,[28] came sixth ahead of Ilott, Vesti, Shwartzman and Lundaard. Following them were the Italian duo of Leonardo Pulcini and Alessio Lorandi in 11th and 12th, and Felipe Drugovich, Verschoor, Maini, Sebastián Fernández, Ahmed, Liam Lawson, Habsburg, Keyvan Andres,[25] Hon Chio Leong, David Schumacher, Flörsch, Fittipaldi, Andreas Estner, Lukas Dunner, Olli Caldwell, Alessio Deledda and Max Fewtrell.[26][29] The top five drivers were separated by 0.619 seconds, while the faster Dallara cars' contributed to an average 3.5-second decrease in lap times.[30] Four red flag stoppages occurred during the session. Fluids from Ahmed's car spilled onto the track en route to the pit lane after he struck a barrier at Lisboa corner.[29] Fewtrell hit the outside barrier at Lisboa turn, and Caldwell stopped on the track after exiting Fisherman's Bend due to engine failure.[27][31] The race director ended the session early when Tsunoda ran into a barrier at Maternity Bend.[26]

Shwartzman led early in the second practice session, but Ticktum eventually went quicker. After that, with over five minutes left, Vips reset the unofficial circuit record to 2 minutes, 6.569 seconds.[32] Ilott was 0.568 seconds slower in second. Verschoor, Armstrong, Lawson, Ticktum, Maini, Shwartzman, Caldwell and Sargeant were third to tenth.[33] Two different incidents necessitated two stoppages.[34] Flörsch stopped against the barrier following the Melco hairpin due to an understeer. She stalled her car while reversing, which blocked the track. As a crane extricated Flörsch's car, Habsburg spun and stopped the session.[33][34] Beckmann slid off course while braking for Police Corner with five minutes later.[32] Ticktum was caught off guard and hit the rear of Beckmann's car at high speed, ending the session early.[33][34] The stewards investigated Ticktum and imposed no penalty; they deemed him to have made "a significant attempt" to avoid Beckmann and a lack of time to notice double waved yellow flags to alert drivers to Ticktum's crash.[35]

Robert Shwartzman started from second place on the grid

The second qualifying session was held in warmer weather than the first. It was first halted after ten minutes when Pulcini crashed; Fittipaldi was caught off guard by Pulcini's accident and hit the rear of his car.[36][37] Before Armstrong crashed into an outside wall at Police turn and removed his front wing and right front tyre with 19 minutes remaining, he became the first driver to lap under the 2 minutes and 6 second mark.[36][38][39] Vips reset the official track lap record to a 2 minutes, 4.997 seconds—five seconds faster than the 2018 lap record—in the final seven minutes.[40][41] The session ended with two minutes to go after a third stoppage, when Habsburg crashed and stopped on the circuit. Vips earned the pole position for the qualifying race.[36][42] Shwartzman was 0.379 seconds slower in second place.[38] Ilott, Lundgaard and Verschoor moved to third, fourth and fifth.[39][42] Hughes fell from first to sixth,[38] with Vesti and Maini seventh and eighth.[40] Armstrong's crash put him ninth, Sargeant tenth, Habsburg eleventh and Fewtrell twelfth.[39] Carlin mechanics rebuilt Ticktum's car; he had 20 minutes on the track and took 13th.[39][40] Behind him the rest of the provisional order was Lorandi, Lawson, Drugovich, Caldwell, Fernández, Beckmann, Ahmed, Tsunoda, Andres, Schumacher, Dunner, Pulcini, Estner, Flörsch, Leong, Deledda and Fittipaldi.[43]

Post-qualifying

[edit]

After qualifying, the stewards imposed a three-place grid penalty on Tsunoda, deeming him to have reversed in "an unexpected manner" to rejoin the circuit after venturing onto the Lisboa corner run-off area.[44]

Qualifying classification

[edit]

Each of the driver's fastest lap times from the two qualifying sessions are denoted in bold.

Final qualifying classification
Pos No. Driver Team Q1 Time Rank Q2 Time Rank Gap Grid
1 6 Estonia Jüri Vips Hitech Grand Prix 2:06.943 3 2:04.997 1 1
2 5 Russia Robert Shwartzman SJM Prema Theodore Racing 2:08.083 9 2:05.376 2 +0.379 2
3 25 United Kingdom Callum Ilott Sauber Junior Team by Charouz 2:07.781 7 2:05.580 3 +0.583 3
4 9 Denmark Christian Lundgaard ART Grand Prix 2:08.250 10 2:05.669 4 +0.672 4
5 21 Netherlands Richard Verschoor MP Motorsport 2:08.578 14 2:05.723 5 +0.726 5
6 16 United Kingdom Jake Hughes HWA Racelab 2:06.793 1 2:05.774 6 +0.777 6
7 3 Denmark Frederik Vesti SJM Prema Theodore Racing 2:07.903 8 2:05.776 7 +0.779 7
8 22 India Arjun Maini Jenzer Motorsport 2:08.644 15 2:05.814 8 +0.817 8
9 2 New Zealand Marcus Armstrong SJM Prema Theodore Racing 2:07.285 4 2:05.955 9 +0.958 9
10 28 United States Logan Sargeant Carlin Buzz Racing 2:07.412 5 2:06.043 10 +1.046 10
11 10 Austria Ferdinand Habsburg ART Grand Prix 2:09.490 19 2:06.209 11 +1.212 11
12 7 United Kingdom Max Fewtrell Hitech Grand Prix 2:16.536 29 2:06.368 12 +1.371 12
13 30 United Kingdom Dan Ticktum Carlin Buzz Racing 2:07.600 6 2:06.406 13 +1.409 13
14 15 Italy Alessio Lorandi Trident Motorsport 2:08.357 12 2:06.428 14 +1.431 14
15 20 New Zealand Liam Lawson MP Motorsport 2:09.296 18 2:06.455 15 +1.458 15
16 29 Brazil Felipe Drugovich Carlin Buzz Racing 2:08.487 13 2:06.637 16 +1.640 16
17 12 United Kingdom Olli Caldwell Trident Motorsport 2:12.105 27 2:06.641 17 +1.644 17
18 11 Spain Sebastián Fernández ART Grand Prix 2:09.052 16 2:06.717 18 +1.720 18
19 14 Germany David Beckmann Trident Motorsport 2:06.844 2 2:08.273 24 +1.847 19
20 32 United Kingdom Enaam Ahmed Campos Racing 2:09.211 17 2:07.146 19 +2.149 20
21 8 Japan Yuki Tsunoda Hitech Grand Prix 30 2:07.307 20 +2.310 241
22 17 Iran Keyvan Andres HWA Racelab 2:09.660 20 2:07.579 21 +2.582 21
23 26 Germany David Schumacher Sauber Junior Team by Charouz 2:10.381 22 2:07.587 22 +2.590 22
24 19 Austria Lukas Dunner MP Motorsport 2:11.129 26 2:07.892 23 +2.895 23
25 33 Italy Leonardo Pulcini Campos Racing 2:08.287 11 2:10.001 28 +3.290 25
26 24 Germany Andreas Estner Jenzer Motorsport 2:11.006 25 2:08.651 25 +3.654 26
27 18 Germany Sophia Flörsch HWA Racelab 2:10.889 23 2:09.259 26 +4.262 27
28 23 Macau Hon Chio Leong Jenzer Motorsport 2:09.918 21 2:09.568 27 +4.571 28
29 31 Italy Alessio Deledda Campos Racing 2:12.991 28 2:10.114 29 +5.117 29
30 27 Brazil Enzo Fittipaldi Sauber Junior Team by Charouz 2:10.894 24 2:10.124 30 +5.127 30
Source:[25][39][43]
Bold time indicates the faster of the two times that determined grid order.
  • ^1  – Yuki Tsunoda had a three-place grid penalty because he was deemed to have reversed in "an unexpected manner" to rejoin the track.[44]

Qualification race

[edit]
Jüri Vips won the qualification race to begin the Grand Prix from pole position.

The 10-lap qualifying race to set the main race's starting order commenced in dry and clear weather with an air temperature at 24 °C (75 °F) at 09:00 Macau Standard Time (UTC+08:00) on 16 November.[6][20][45] Vips kept the lead from Shwartzman heading into Lisboa turn after a slow start.[46] Lundgaard overtook Ilott for third and slipstreamed Shwartzman,[47] who held second from Lundgaard.[46] Further back, Sargeant braked later than other drivers and his front wing glanced Maini's rear-right wheel. Maini was sent into a spin and collided with a trackside wall, causing his vehicle to protrude at the exit of the Lisboa turn.[47][48] Ticktum attempted to pass Hughes as he navigated his way past Maini's car and they collided. Ticktum was launched into the air and made a repair stop. Hughes and Ahmed were caught up in the crash as Sargeant continued driving. Officials dispatched the safety car to allow track marshals to clear debris. Armstrong and Vesti lost several positions, promoting Lorandi and Schumacher to the top ten; Schumacher made a pit stop for unknown reasons and fell down the order.[46][47][49]

The safety car was withdrawn on the fourth lap and Vips maintained the lead from Shwartzman at the rolling restart. Vips began to draw away from the rest of the field to the point where he was able to prevent Shwartzman from overtaking him with DRS.[50] DRS was used by several drivers until it was disabled due to a sensor failure that limited its use.[51] On the eighth lap, Verschoor caught Ilott and used the slipstream from the back of the latter's vehicle to pass him for fourth place on the straight linking the Mandarin Oriental Bend and Lisboa turns.[47][49] On the same lap, Drugovich in 15th made a braking error for the Lisboa turn and crashed, forcing him to retire. He exited his car unaided and swift work by track marshals to extricate his car before the field passed by eliminated the need for a second safety car deployment.[46][47][50] Vips finished the qualification race first to earn pole position for the Grand Prix. Shwartzman was second and Lundgaard third.[49] The final classified finishers were Verschoor, Ilott, Sargeant, Lorandi, Habsburg, Beckmann, Pulcini, Andres, Dunner, Leong, Fittipaldi, Fernández, Tsunoda, Armstrong, Vesti, Estner, Lawson, Flörsch, Fewtrell, Caldwell, Deledda and Schumacher.[45]

Qualification race classification

[edit]
Final qualification race classification
Pos No. Driver Team Laps Time/Retired Grid
1 6 Estonia Jüri Vips Hitech Grand Prix 10 25:09.190 1
2 5 Russia Robert Shwartzman SJM Prema Theodore Racing 10 +1.549 2
3 9 Denmark Christian Lundgaard ART Grand Prix 10 +5.625 4
4 21 Netherlands Richard Verschoor MP Motorsport 10 +7.402 5
5 25 United Kingdom Callum Ilott Sauber Junior Team by Charouz 10 +10.767 3
6 28 United States Logan Sargeant Carlin Buzz Racing 10 +11.216 10
7 15 Italy Alessio Lorandi Trident Motorsport 10 +11.900 14
8 10 Austria Ferdinand Habsburg ART Grand Prix 10 +13.200 11
9 14 Germany David Beckmann Trident Motorsport 10 +20.006 19
10 33 Italy Leonardo Pulcini Campos Racing 10 +25.551 25
11 17 Iran Keyvan Andres HWA Racelab 10 +26.416 22
12 19 Austria Lukas Dunner MP Motorsport 10 +28.233 24
13 23 Macau Hon Chio Leong Jenzer Motorsport 10 +32.905 28
14 27 Brazil Enzo Fittipaldi Sauber Junior Team by Charouz 10 +33.676 30
15 11 Spain Sebastián Fernández ART Grand Prix 10 +34.261 18
16 8 Japan Yuki Tsunoda Hitech Grand Prix 10 +34.698 21
17 2 New Zealand Marcus Armstrong SJM Prema Theodore Racing 10 +35.403 9
18 3 Denmark Frederik Vesti SJM Prema Theodore Racing 10 +35.653 7
19 24 Germany Andreas Estner Jenzer Motorsport 10 +36.687 26
20 20 New Zealand Liam Lawson MP Motorsport 10 +37.151 15
21 18 Germany Sophia Flörsch HWA Racelab 10 +38.158 27
22 7 United Kingdom Max Fewtrell Hitech Grand Prix 10 +38.634 12
23 12 United Kingdom Olli Caldwell Trident Motorsport 10 +39.338 17
24 31 Italy Alessio Deledda Campos Racing 10 +58.920 29
25 26 Germany David Schumacher Sauber Junior Team by Charouz 10 +1:37.059 23
NC 30 United Kingdom Dan Ticktum Carlin Buzz Racing 8 +2 Laps 132
Ret 29 Brazil Felipe Drugovich Carlin Buzz Racing 8 Accident 16
Ret 16 United Kingdom Jake Hughes HWA Racelab 0 Accident 6
Ret 22 India Arjun Maini Jenzer Motorsport 0 Accident 8
Ret 32 United Kingdom Enaam Ahmed Campos Racing 0 Accident 20
Fastest Lap: Jüri Vips, 2:06.317, 174.4 mph (280.7 km/h) on Lap 8[45]
Source:[45]
  • ^2  – Dan Ticktum was running at the completion of the race and was not classified because he failed to complete 90 per cent of the total race distance.[45]

Main race

[edit]
Logan Sargeant finished the Grand Prix in third position from a sixth-place start

The 15-lap race began in dry and clear weather of 25 °C (77 °F) at 15:30 local time on 17 November.[6][20][52][53] Vips maintained the lead into Mandarin Oriental Bend.[53] Shwartzman in second position had a slow start and Lundgaard on the right drew alongside him; Verschoor steered right to go three-abreast as he slipstreamed past Lundgaard and Shwartzman for second.[54][55] Room on the track lessened and Shwartzman and Lundgaard collided.[53] Shwartzman's front-right wing end-plate collided with Lundgaard's rear-left wheel, causing the latter to drive over the appendage and puncture Shwartzman's front-right tyre.[54][56] Shwartzman slowed and stopped on Lisboa corner's run-off area to retire.[54] Ilott made a slow getaway and fell to eighth.[53] By the conclusion of lap one Lawson had moved from 20th to 13th as Armstrong had overtaken Vesti for 16th,[55] and Vips led Verschoor by 1.8 seconds.[54]

Caldwell retired on the fourth lap owing to the results of a earlier collision that damaged his front wing and a tyre.[57] Pulcini retired from seventh when he struck a tyre barrier at Lisboa corner.[55][58] Soon after, the safety car was deployed due to an accident, erasing Vips' lead over Verschoor:[56] Habsburg rushed into the Solitude Esses, ricocheted off a right-hand-side kerb, and struck the wall.[54][59] Habsburg exited his car unhurt and unaided as both his and Pulicini's cars were extricated from the circuit.[55][58] At the restart on lap eight,[56] which saw the field return to racing speed,[60] Verschoor prepared to pass Vips while the latter weaved on the track to avoid being slipstreamed by the former.[54][61] Verschoor had a strong side slipstream, more speed and grip,[61] turned left and braked later than Vips to take the lead before Lisboa corner.[55][56][59] Sargeant overtook Lorandi for fourth and an understeer lost Andres eighth to Lawson.[53][62] On lap nine Sargeant passed Lundgaard at Lisboa corner for third.[53][56]

Richard Verschoor won the race to become the first Dutch driver to win the Macau Grand Prix and was the first rookie to win the event since Keisuke Kunimoto in the 2008 edition.

Flörsch experienced an electrical fault on the straight before Mandarin Oriental Bend on lap nine,[62] prompting a virtual safety car period to temporarily stop racing and allow for the recovery of Flörsch's car.[53][55] When the virtual safety car procedure was lifted, Vips drove on debris and wore his tyres, reducing their grip.[54] He drew close to Verschoor after the latter made an error at Police Bend but could not pass him due to the narrow track.[55] Vips subsequently tried to pass Verschoor into Lisboa turn on lap eleven; the latter swerved to avoid a trackside wall and braked as late as possible to maintain the lead.[53][56] On the next lap, Vips attempted to pass Verschoor on the entry to Lisboa corner using DRS, but was unsuccessful since Verschoor went left as late as he could. Verschoor caused Vips to run close to the turn's run-off area after Vips flat-spotted his tyres, affecting his car's handling.[53][60][61]

Vips was still able to get close to Verschoor, who had adapted to a bent steering arm and was fighting for control of his car.[54][60] Both Verschoor and Vips made errors on the 14th lap; Verschoor locked his tyres and Vips oversteered at Fisherman's Bend. Vips again used DRS and Verschoor defended the lead.[53] On his first appearance in Macau, it was Verschoor's victory, achieving the first win for a rookie driver in Macau since Keisuke Kunimoto in 2008.[54] He was the first Dutch driver to win the race,[63] and the second to win the Macau and New Zealand Grands Prix after Roberto Moreno in 1982.[55] Vips finished second, surpassing Ralf Aron as the highest-placed Estonian in Macau,[64] and Sargeant third. Off the podium, Lundgaard was fourth after Sargeant held him off.[65] Lorandi finished fifth in his first race back from a thumb injury. Ilott took sixth ahead of Lawson, who gained 13 places after starting 20th.[54] Armstrong, Beckmann, Vesti, Tsunoda, Andres, Ticktum, Dunner, Fernández, Fittipaldi, Hughes, Fewtrell, Leong, Estner, Schumacher, Ahmed, Maini, Drugovich and Deledda were the final finishers.[52]

Post-race

[edit]

The top three drivers appeared on the podium to collect their trophies and spoke to the media in a later press conference.[6] Verschoor stated his happiness at winning and declared a desire to return to Macau in 2020: "To be honest, I am not believing the feeling yet! It hasn't sunk in that I have just won the Macau Grand Prix! It was a really busy race and I was under a lot of pressure. I had to concentrate so much towards the end, and I am still recovering a bit. Both the team and myself are maybe not as experienced yet or consistently at the same level as some of the other guys, so this is a huge result for the team, myself and everyone involved."[59] Vips expressed disappointment at not winning and blamed it on a DRS failure and tyre degradation on his car: "I'm just feeling disappointed because I think I did the perfect weekend minus the safety car restart. The DRS was supposed to work but it didn't. I don't know how I managed to keep Richard under pressure in the middle sector because my tyres were finished."[66]

Sargeant thanked his team Carlin for the work they put in for the race: "They have done an absolutely brilliant job this weekend. I think we have come here with full force and full preparation. It's been a difficult year and that's why I want to really thank Carlin, because we've really brought something extra here and we have worked hard for it."[67] Shwartzman declared himself to have had a "very sad" early end to his race: "All weekend we had really good pace and were fighting for the win. Macau is like a gambling game, you never know what is going to happen. Anyways, we did all we could this week, thank you Prema – the car was on the top [level]."[68] Ilott said he had not driven the Dallara car before the race or did any simulator running due to air flight cancellations. He spoke of the car on the race, "We changed a lot on the car after the qualification race and it did work out. But I lost a bit of time from the virtual safety car and trying to work back from that was quite difficult."[69]

Race classification

[edit]
Final race classification
Pos No. Driver Team Laps Time/Retired Grid
1 21 Netherlands Richard Verschoor MP Motorsport 15 38:10.330 4
2 6 Estonia Jüri Vips Hitech Grand Prix 15 +0.792 1
3 28 United States Logan Sargeant Carlin Buzz Racing 15 +1.540 6
4 9 Denmark Christian Lundgaard ART Grand Prix 15 +2.241 3
5 15 Italy Alessio Lorandi Trident Motorsport 15 +5.020 7
6 25 United Kingdom Callum Ilott Sauber Junior Team by Charouz 15 +5.922 5
7 20 New Zealand Liam Lawson MP Motorsport 15 +8.954 20
8 2 New Zealand Marcus Armstrong SJM Prema Theodore Racing 15 +9.365 17
9 14 Germany David Beckmann Trident Motorsport 15 +13.239 9
10 3 Denmark Frederik Vesti SJM Prema Theodore Racing 15 +13.633 18
11 8 Japan Yuki Tsunoda Hitech Grand Prix 15 +15.717 16
12 17 Iran Keyvan Andres HWA Racelab 15 +18.665 11
13 30 United Kingdom Dan Ticktum Carlin Buzz Racing 15 +19.230 26
14 19 Austria Lukas Dunner MP Motorsport 15 +20.498 12
15 11 Spain Sebastián Fernández ART Grand Prix 15 +21.705 15
16 27 Brazil Enzo Fittipaldi Sauber Junior Team by Charouz 15 +26.174 14
17 16 United Kingdom Jake Hughes HWA Racelab 15 +26.294 28
18 7 United Kingdom Max Fewtrell Hitech Grand Prix 15 +28.690 22
19 23 Macau Hon Chio Leong Jenzer Motorsport 15 +33.792 13
20 24 Germany Andreas Estner Jenzer Motorsport 15 +34.400 19
21 26 Germany David Schumacher Sauber Junior Team by Charouz 15 +35.894 25
22 32 United Kingdom Enaam Ahmed Campos Racing 15 +36.521 30
23 22 India Arjun Maini Jenzer Motorsport 15 +37.184 29
24 29 Brazil Felipe Drugovich Carlin Buzz Racing 15 +37.621 27
25 31 Italy Alessio Deledda Campos Racing 15 +53.135 24
Ret 18 Germany Sophia Flörsch HWA Racelab 8 Electrics 21
Ret 10 Austria Ferdinand Habsburg ART Grand Prix 3 Crash 8
Ret 33 Italy Leonardo Pulcini Campos Racing 3 Crash 10
Ret 12 United Kingdom Olli Caldwell Trident Motorsport 3 Suspension 23
Ret 5 Russia Robert Shwartzman SJM Prema Theodore Racing 0 Crash 2
Fastest Lap: Jake Hughes, 2:06.419, 174.2 km/h (108.2 mph) on Lap 14[52]
Source:[5][52]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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  2. ^ "Macau Grand Prix". Macao Government Tourism Office. Archived from the original on 11 February 2018. Retrieved 28 October 2018.
  3. ^ Benyon, Jack (4 July 2019). "FIA F3 car to Macau in non-championship race, track changes expected". Autosport. Archived from the original on 15 July 2019. Retrieved 18 November 2019.
  4. ^ a b "Glittering International Line-Up Announced for November Macau Grand Prix". Macau Grand Prix Committee. 17 October 2019. Archived from the original on 18 February 2020. Retrieved 18 November 2019.
  5. ^ a b "2019 Macau Grand Prix". Racing-Reference. Archived from the original on 16 April 2020. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  6. ^ a b c d e "FIA Formula 3 World Cup 2019: Sporting Regulations" (PDF). Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile. 11 September 2019. pp. 3, 19 & 27. Retrieved 18 November 2019.
  7. ^ a b c Benyon, Jack (17 October 2019). "Ticktum, Ilott headline Macau GP entry list". motorsport.com. Archived from the original on 23 November 2019. Retrieved 18 November 2019.
  8. ^ Reiners, Andreas (3 November 2019). "Habsburg: Irrer Macau-Crash hat Tür zur DTM geöffnet" (in German). Speedweek. Archived from the original on 5 November 2019. Retrieved 18 November 2019.
  9. ^ "Arjun to race back to back in Macau and Shanghai". Outlook. Indo-Asian News Service. 4 November 2019. Archived from the original on 5 November 2019. Retrieved 18 November 2019.
  10. ^ Wood, Elliot (31 October 2019). "Enaam Ahmed to compete for Campos Racing in Macau Grand Prix". Formula Scout. Archived from the original on 1 November 2019. Retrieved 18 November 2019.
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